Craters (A)
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To Gazetteer Index]
|
Common Name
|
Lat
|
Long
|
Diam
|
Origin
|
|
Abbe
|
57.3S
|
175.2E
|
66
|
Ernst K. ~ (1840-1905), German educator, optician,
physicist and astronomer; appointed professor of physics and
mathematics at the University of Jena (1870) and director of the
astronomical and meteorological observatories at Jena (1878).
Invented the apochromatic lens system for the microscope.
|
|
Abbot
|
5.6N
|
54.8E
|
10
|
Charles Greeley ~ (1872-1973), American
astrophysicist; as director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory (Washington, D.C.) for almost four decades, he engaged
in a career-long campaign to demonstrate that the Sun's energy
output varies and has a measurable effect on the Earth's weather.
|
|
Abduh
|
14.7N
|
39.0E
|
9
|
Mohammed ~ (1849-1905), Egyptian reformer; pioneer of
Islamic modernism and nationalism who preached Muslim unity against
Western imperialism. After serving as a judge in his country's
national courts, Abduh became grand mufti, Egypt's highest official
interpreter of the shari'a (Islamic law).
|
|
Abel
|
34.5S
|
87.3E
|
122
|
Niels Henrik ~ (1802-1829), Norwegian mathematician;
investigated generalizations of the binomial theorem, pioneered in
the general theory of elliptic functions, and showed that elliptic
functions are a generalization of trigonometric functions.
Commutative groups are called Abelian Groups in his honor. Died of
tuberculosis at age 26.
|
|
Abenezra
|
21.0S
|
11.9E
|
42
|
Abraham Bar Rabbi ben-Ezra, or ~ of Toledo (1092-1167), Spanish-Jewish
mathematician and astronomer; published the renowned mathematic
works "Book of Unity," "Book of Numbers" and
"Stratagem" in Hebrew.
|
|
Abetti
|
19.9N
|
27.7E
|
65
|
Antonio ~ (1846-1928), Italian civil engineer and astronomer;
director of the observatory in Arcetri and professor of astronomy at
the University of Florence. In 1874, he observed the transit of
Venus across the Sun's disk through a spectroscope, the first time
the instrument was used for this purpose.
Also
Georgio ~
(1882-1982),
Italian astronomer, son of Antonio ~; after serving as assistant
astronomer at the observatory of the Collegio Romano in Rome, he
succeeded his father as director of the astrophysical observatory at
Arcetri (1921). Vice president of the International Astronomical
Union.
N.B., The minor planet (2646) Abetti is named in honor of the
Abettis.
|
|
Abul W'afa
|
1.0N
|
116.6E
|
55
|
Abul Wafa Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Yahya Ibn Ismail
al-Buzjani (940-997), Persian mathematician and astronomer, born in
Buzjan, Nishapur; first to show the generality of the sine theorem
relative to spherical triangles. He developed a new method of
constructing sine tables, the value of sin 30' being correct
to the eighth decimal place. As an astronomer, he discussed
different movernents of the Moon and discovered 'variation.' He was
also one of the last Arabic translators and commentators of Greek
works.
|
|
Abulfeda
|
13.8S
|
13.9E
|
65
|
Ismail Abu'l Fida, or ~ (1273-1331), Syrian
geographer; wrote Thakwim el-Boldan ("The true position
of the countries"), in which he used astronomically-determined
locations and the Columns of Hercules as a reference point for the
longitude.
|
|
Acosta
|
5.6S
|
60.1E
|
13
|
Cristobal ~ (1515-1580), Portuguese doctor and natural
historian; a pioneers in studying the plants of the Orient,
especially in their pharmaceutical uses. His Tractado de las
drogas y medicinas de las Indias orientales contains systematic,
first hand observations on Eastern medicines.
|
|
Adams
|
31.9S
|
68.2E
|
66
|
John Couch ~ (1819-1892), British mathematician and astronomer;
as an undergraduate at St. Johns College, Cambridge, he performed an
investigation to explain the reason for the irregularities in the
motion of the planet Uranus. Adams theorized that the unexpected
planetary orbit could be due to the presence of an as yet
undiscovered planet in the vicinity, and that the new planet was
twice as far from the Sun as Uranus. All of the calculations were
worked out in his head before he ever wrote them down. Once Adams
did put his work on paper, he submitted it to the director of the
Cambridge Observatory, who took no action on his work. Several
months later, Urbain le Verrier (q.v.) submitted similar work to
Johann Gottfried Galle (q.v.), the director of the Berlin
Observatory. Galle acted on Le Verrier's work and became the first
person to observe Neptune. After the discovery of Neptune, the
director of the Cambridge Observatory pointed out that Adams had
been the first to predict the presence of Neptune. Le Verrier
resented the effort to have Adams declared the sole discoverer of
Neptune. Adams, a quiet, unambitious man, was content to share the
credit.
Also Charles H. "Carlie" ~ (1868-1951), American astronomer;
secretary/treasurer of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
(1925-1950). His enthusiastic support of astronomy and the ASP
brought in many new members, and he personally mentored many
students. Father of the photographer Ansel Adams.
Also Dr. Walter Sydney ~
(1876-1956), American astronomer; director of Mt. Wilson Observatory
(1923-46). His spectroscopic studies of the Sun and stars led to the
discovery, with Arnold Kohlschütter, of a spectroscopic method for
determining stellar distances. He worked with George Ellery Hale
(q.v.) on the discovery of magnetic fields in sunspots, and he used
photography to measure the differential rotation of the sun. He
shared with Theodore Dunham, Jr., in the discoveries of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere of Venus and the molecules CN and CH in
interstellar gas clouds. Adams identified Sirius B as the first
white dwarf star known, and his measurement of its gravitational
redshift was taken as confirming evidence for the general theory of
relativity. Awarded the Bruce Medal in 1928.
|
|
Agatharchides
|
19.8S
|
30.9W
|
48
|
~ of Cnidus (fl. 2nd century AD), Greek philosopher,
geographer, historian, traveller and naturalist; in his writings, he
provided geographic and ethnographic information about many
countries and described unusual species of plants and animals (e.g.,
ant lions, rhinoceros, giraffes, giant snakes, etc.). He described
the way of life of the peoples of Arabia and East Africa, provided
information on the gold mines of Ethiopia, and explained the
phenomenon of the periodic flooding of the Nile.
|
|
Agrippa
|
4.1N
|
10.5E
|
44
|
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim, or Henricus
Cornelius Agrippa ab Nettesheym (1486-1535), lawyer, theologian and
occultist; medieval scholar who was influenced by Platonism,
Neoplatonism, and Hermeticism. His most famous work, De occulta
philosophia libri tres (1531), explores magic, astrology,
alchemy, theurgy, medicine, mysticism, and more, and was a major
factor in the spread of the occult sciences. Agrippa was jailed at
least once in his life and branded a heretic.
|
|
Airy
|
18.1S
|
5.7E
|
36
|
Sir George Biddell ~, K.C.B. (1801-1892), British
mathematician, educator and astronomer. After graduating from
Trinity College, Cambridge (1823), he worked as an assistant tutor
in mathematics. In 1826, Airy became Professor of Mathematics at
Cambridge. His interest in astronomy had developed in this period,
as is reflected in his Mathematical Tracts on Physical Astronomy,
published the same year. He was elected Professor of Astronomy and
Director of the Cambridge Observatory in 1828, and in 1835 became
the seventh Astronomer Royal. He invented and improved several
devices, including the altazimuth telescope (1847) and the Airy
Transit Circle, which provided the Observatory with its fourth
meridian line; it is this line on which Greenwich Mean Time is
based.
|
|
Aitken
|
16.8S
|
173.4E
|
135
|
Robert Grant ~ (1864-1951), American astronomer;
worked at the University of California's Lick Observatory from 1895
to 1935, serving as associate director for seven years before
becoming its director from 1930-1935. Aitken made systematic surveys
of binary stars, discovering thousands, measuring their positions
visually, and calculating orbits for many. His massive New
General Catalogue of Double Stars within 120 degrees of the North
Pole allowed orbit determinations which increased astronomers'
knowledge of stellar masses. Awarded the 1926 Bruce Medal.
|
|
Akis
|
20.0N
|
31.8W
|
2
|
Greek female name.
|
|
Al-Bakri
|
14.3N
|
20.2E
|
12
|
Abu Abdullah al-Bakri (1010-1094), Spanish-Arab geographer.
|
|
Al-Biruni
|
17.9N
|
92.5E
|
77
|
Abu Arrayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Biruni (973-1048), Persian astronomer, mathematician and
geographer, born in Uzbekistan; made important contributions to
geodesy and geography, including techniques to measure the Earth and
distances on it using triangulation. Among his notable writings were
Cartography, India and Shadows.
|
|
Al-Khwarizmi
|
7.1N
|
106.4E
|
65
|
Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi (780?-c. 825), Iraqi
mathematician and astronomer; the algebra treatise Hisab al-jabr
w'al-muqabala was the most famous and important of his works.
The title of this text gives us the word "algebra" (al-jabr)
and is widely recognized as the first book to be written on the
subject.
|
|
Al-Marrakushi
|
10.4S
|
55.8E
|
8
|
al-Marrakushi ibn Al-Banna, or Abu'l-Abbas Ahmad ibn
Muhammad ibn Uthman al-Azdi (1256-1321), Moroccan astronomer and
mathematician; first to consider a fraction as a ratio between two
numbers and to use the expression "almanac" (from the
Arabic term al-manakh, meaning weather) in a work containing
astronomical and meteorological data.
|
|
Alan
|
10.9S
|
6.1W
|
2
|
Irish male name.
|
|
Albategnius
|
11.7S
|
4.3E
|
114
|
Muhammed Ben Geber C. Al-Batani, or ~ (852-929),
Mesopotamian astronomer and mathematician; generally credited for
discovering the movement of the solar apogee. Described his
observations of the Solar System in two papers titled Zydge Saby
(Sabaeic Tables), which were translated by Plato Tiburtinus into
Latin, and were later extended and published by Regiomontanus (qq.v.).
|
|
Alden
|
23.6S
|
110.8E
|
104
|
Harold Lee ~ (1890-1964), American astronomer; after
serving as an assistant at Yerkes Observatory (Chicago), became
director of Yale University's Southern Station at Johannesburg,
South Africa (1925). Professor of Astronomy, chairman of the
Astronomy Department, and Director of the Leander McCormick
Observatory at the University of Virginia (1945-1960). Vice-president
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and
chairman of its astronomy section (1951); president of the stellar
parallaxes section of the International Astronomical Union
(1952-1955).
|
|
Alder
|
48.6S
|
177.4W
|
77
|
Kurt ~ (1902-1958), German organic chemist; shared the
1950 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Otto Diels (q.v.) for the
discovery and development of the synthesis of dienes.
|
|
Aldrin
|
1.4N
|
22.1E
|
3
|
Edwin E. "Buzz" ~, Jr., Ph.D. (1930- ), American
fighter pilot, test pilot and astronaut;
second man on the Moon.
|
|
Alekhin
|
68.2S
|
131.3W
|
70
|
Nikolai P. ~ (1913-1964), Soviet rocket designer and engineer.
|
|
Alexander
|
40.3N
|
13.5E
|
81
|
Alexandros III Philippou Makedonon, or Alexander the
Great of Macedon (356-323 B.C.), Greek ruler, military commander and
geographer; conqueror of Asia.
|
|
Alfraganus
|
5.4S
|
19.0E
|
20
|
Muhammed Ebn Ketir Al Fargani, or ~ (?-c. 861?), Arab
astronomer, born in Transoxania (now Pakistan); his most important
work, Elements, a thorough, non-mathematical summary of
Ptolemaic astronomy, was written between 833 and 857.
|
|
Alhazen
|
15.9N
|
71.8E
|
32
|
Abu Ali Al-Hasan Ibn al-Haitham, or ~ (965-1040), Iraqi
mathematician and astronomer; developed analytical geometry by
establishing linkage between algebra and geometry. He studied the
mechanics of motion of a body and was the first to maintain that a
body moves perpetually unless an external force stops it or changes
its direction of motion (the "first law of motion").
Author of more than 200 books, including a several volumes on
cosmology that were translated into Latin, Hebrew and other
languages.
|
|
Aliacensis
|
30.6S
|
5.2E
|
79
|
Pierre D'Ailly, or Petrus de Allaco, or ~ (1350-1420), French
theologian, geographer, author and Roman Catholic cardinal; his
writings embraced numerous subjects, including theology, philosophy,
cosmography, plans for ecclesiastical reform, and French religious
verse. One of his works, the astronomical compendium Imago mundi,
was studied by Columbus.
|
|
Almanon
|
16.8S
|
15.2E
|
49
|
Abdalla al-Mamun (786-833), Persian astronomer and
patron of sciences.
|
|
Aloha
|
29.8N
|
53.9W
|
3
|
Hawaiian greeting.
|
|
Alpetragius
|
16.0S
|
4.5W
|
39
|
Nur al-Din Ibn Ishaq Al-Bitruji, or Al-Betrugi, or ~ (?-c. 1100), Moroccan
astronomer; a leading astronomer of his era. His 'Kitab-al-Hay'ah
was popular in Europe in the thirteenth century and was first
translated into Hebrew and later from Hebrew into Latin.
|
|
Alphonsus
|
13.7S
|
3.2W
|
108
|
Alfonso X el Sabio ("The Wise"), or ~
(1221-1284), Spanish ruler, king of Castile and Leon between 1252
and 1284; a noted patron of the sciences, and especially astronomy.
|
|
Alter
|
18.7N
|
107.5W
|
64
|
Dinsmore ~, Ph.D. (1888-1968), American astronomer and
meteorologist; vice president of the Meteorological Society
(1925-27) and president of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
(1950). Associate professor at the University of Kansas, Lawrence
(1919-1935); research associate at California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena (1935-1942). As director of Griffith
Observatory and Planetarium, Los Angeles (1935-1958), he was known
for his creative and innovative public programs. Guggenheim
Foundation fellow (1929).
|
|
Ameghino
|
3.3N
|
57.0E
|
9
|
Florentino ~ (1854-1911), Argentinean natural
historian and paleontologist; made significant contributions to the
field of vertebrate paleontology.
|
|
Amici
|
9.9S
|
172.1W
|
54
|
Giovanni Battista ~ (1786-1863), Italian astronomer and
botanist; best known as the inventor of the achromatic lens and the
water immersion lens. Also designed reflecting telescopes and
introduced a lens for the inspection of an objective's rear focal
plane, now known as the Amici-Bertrand lens. As an astronomer, Amici
studied double stars, Jupiter's moons, and made improvements to
reflecting telescope mirrors. With his own micrometer design, Amici
made accurate measurements of the polar and equatorial diameters of
the Sun. Combining botany with innovative advances in compound
microscopes, he made important discoveries about the circulation of
sap in plants and the processes of plant reproduction, including
many details of orchid pollination and seed development.
|
|
Ammonius
|
8.5S
|
0.8W
|
8
|
~ Saccas, or Sakkas (175?–242), Greek theosophist
and philosopher; often called the founder of the neo-Platonic
school. established the Neoplatonic School at Alexandria in
193, where he became the teacher of Clement, Origen, and
Plotinus;
Also Ammonius Hermiae (c. 550), Greek philosopher; his
teachings dealt primarily with logic and science. He wrote many
critical works on Aristotle, including Commentaria in categorias
Aristotelis. A student with Proclus, he was later appointed the
head of the Alexandrian school.
|
|
Amontons
|
5.3S
|
46.8E
|
2
|
Guillaume ~ (1663-1705), French physicist; despite
being deaf since childhood, he invented and perfected various
scientific instruments, including the hygrometer, an improved
barometer and a constant-volume air thermometer. Observed that equal
drops in temperature resulted in equal drops in pressure, and
realized that at a low enough temperature the volume and pressure of
the air would become zero — an early recognition of the concept of
"absolute zero."
|
|
Amundsen
|
84.3S
|
85.6E
|
101
|
Roald Engelbregt Grauning ~ (1872-1928), Norwegian
explorer; commanded the Gjöa in the Arctic regions in the
first negotiation of the Northwest Passage (1903–19066); the Gjöa
was the first single ship to complete the route through the
Northwest Passage. Succeeded in flying over the North Pole and the
previously unexplored regions of the Arctic Ocean north of Alaska in
the dirigible Norge, built and piloted by Umberto Nobile
(1926), believed to be the first successful flight over the pole.
Died while attempting to rescue Nobile following the crash of the Italia
in 1928.
|
|
Anaxagoras
|
73.4N
|
10.1W
|
50
|
~ of Clazomenae (500-428 B.C.E.), Greek natural
philosopher and astronomer; noted as the first philosopher of
Athens. Remembered for his cosmology and for his discovery of the
true cause of eclipses.
|
|
Anaximander
|
66.9N |
51.3W |
67 |
~of Miletus (610-c. 546 B.C.),
Greek philosopher; conceived the idea that the stars were fixed on a
crystalline sphere rotating around the Earth. Believed the Earth to be
cylindrical with a diameter three times its height, and that it was the center
of the universe. Like his teacher, Thales, he imported ideas from the East,
including the sundial. |
|
Anaximenes
|
72.5N |
44.5W |
80 |
~ (585-528 B.C.), Greek astronomer,
pupil of Anaximander; the first Greek to distinguish clearly between planets
and stars. He believed the primary substance of the universe was air, which
could form the other elements of water, earth and fire by rarefaction and
condensation. He explained the rainbow as light hitting condensed air. |
|
Anders
|
41.3S |
142.9W |
40 |
William A. ~ (1933- ), American astronaut,
born in Hong Kong; aboard Apollo 8 on 21 December 1968, Anders, James
Lovell and Frank Borman (qq.v.) became the first men to leave Earth's gravity
and orbit the Moon. |
|
Anderson
|
15.8N |
171.1E |
109 |
John A. ~ (1876-1959), American
physicist; adapted Michelson's interferometric method for close double stars. |
|
Andersson
|
49.7S |
95.3W |
13 |
Leif Erland ~ (1943-1979), Swedish-American astronomer;
calculated the observable transits and occultations of Pluto and its moon,
Charon. Died of lymphatic cancer in 1979 at age 35, several years before the
results of his research became evident. |
|
Andronov
|
22.7S |
146.1E |
16 |
Aleksandr Aleksandrovich ~
(1901-1952), Soviet physicist; a principle in the development of control
engineering and non-linear dynamics. Co-author of Theory of Oscillators
(with Vitt and Khaikin). |
|
Andvel
|
10.4S |
12.4E |
35 |
Karel ~ (1884-1947), Czechoslovakian astronomer. |
|
Ango
|
20.5N |
32.3W |
1 |
African male name. |
|
Ångström
|
29.9N |
41.6W |
9 |
Anders Jonas ~ (1814-1874), Swedish physicist;
noted as the "father of the spectral analysis." The Angstrom Unit,
used especially to specify radiation wavelengths, is a length equal to one
hundred-millionth of a centimeter, and was named in his honor. |
|
Ann
|
25.1N |
0.1W |
3 |
Hebrew female name. |
|
Annegrit
|
29.4N |
25.6W |
1 |
German female name. |
|
Ansgarius
|
12.7S |
79.7E |
94 |
St. Ansgar, or St. Anskar, or ~
(801-864), German theologian, Patron of Scandinavia; the first Christian
missionary in Scandinavia, he built the first Christian Church in Sweden.
Called "the Apostle of the North." |
|
Antoniadi
|
69.7S |
172.0W |
143 |
Eugène Michael ~ (1870-1944), French astronomer,
born in Greece; a leading and decisive critic of the canal hypothesis of Mars,
in his magnum opus, La planète Mars (1930), he presented a
state-of-the-art summary of Martian topography and helped set the scene for
the modern investigation of the planet. Antoniadi Ridge on Mercury, as well as
this Lunar crater and another on Mars, were named in his honor. |
|
Anuchin
|
49.0S |
101.3E |
57 |
Dmitrii Nikolaevich ~ (1843-1923), Russian geographer,
zoologist and academician. |
|
Anville
|
1.9N |
49.5E |
10 |
Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville
(1697-1782), French cartographer; as geographer to the king of France
beginning in 1719, he improved maps of Italy, Asia, and Africa. |
|
Apianus
|
26.9S |
7.9E |
63 |
Peter Bienewitz, Latinized to Petrus
~ (1495-1552), German mathematician, cosmographer and astronomer; professor of
mathematics at Ingolstadt, noted for his knowledge of astronomy. Principle
among his writings is Cosmographia (1524), which includes some of the
earliest maps of the Americas. |
|
Apollo
|
36.1S |
151.8W |
537 |
Named to honor the U.S. Apollo missions. |
|
Apollonius
|
4.5N |
61.1E |
53 |
Apollonius of Perga (ca. 262-ca. 190
B.C.), Greek mathematician and geometer; postulated that the planets revolved
around the Sun and the Sun revolves around the Earth. Believed to be the
inventor of the system of epicycles and eccentric circles. Also wrote a
monumental treatise on conic sections, On Conics. In this treatise, the
term ellipse was first used. |
|
Appleton
|
37.2N |
158.3E |
63 |
Sir Edward Victor ~ (1892-1965), British physicist;
Wheatstone Professor of Physics, University of London (1924-1936), Jacksonian
Professor of Natural Philosophy (1936-1939). Appointed to the post of
Secretary of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, the senior
British Government post concerned with physical science (1939). In 1924
Appleton began a series of experiments which proved the existence of the
ionosphere. With the cooperation of the BBC, he applied FM to the Bournemouth
transmitter and observed a beat between the signal reflected from what he
later called the E layer and the outgoing signal, thus proving conclusively
the existence of the ionosphere, as well as measuring its height. In 1926 he
discovered an upper layer which he subsequently called the F layer. In 1932,
he set forth the now classical magneto-ionic theory which quantitatively
describes radio-wave propagation in the ionosphere. Awarded the 1947 Nobel
Prize in physics "for his investigations of the physics of the upper
atmosphere especially for the discovery of the so-called Appleton layer." |
|
Arago
|
6.2N |
21.4E |
26 |
Dominique François Jean ~
(1786-1853), French astronomer; became professor of analytical geometry at the
École Polytechnique at the age of 23, and later became director of the Paris
Observatory. Served for many years as secretary of the Académie des Sciences
and was active politically for the Republican cause. Working with Fresnel
(q.v.), he discovered that two beams of light polarized in perpendicular
directions do not interfere, leading to the transverse theory of light waves.
Working with Biot (q.v.), Arago made measurements of arc length on the Earth
which led to the standardization of the metric system of lengths. |
|
Aratus
|
23.6N |
4.5E |
10 |
~ of Soli (fl. 315-240 B.C.), Greek
poet, philosopher, mathematician and astronomer; wrote an astronomical
treatise, Phenomena, which was quoted by Paul at Athens. |
|
Archimedes
|
29.7N |
4.0W |
82 |
~ of Syracuse (c. 287-212 B.C.), Greek
physicist and mathematician; generally considered to be the greatest
mathematician of ancient times. His fame is linked to "Archimedes'
principle," by which a body immersed in a liquid receives an upward
thrust from the bottom towards the top equal to the weight of the displaced
liquid. The importance of Archimedes' contribution to the history of
scientific thought derives above all from the influence exercised by him on
the formation and development of a method of quantitative mathematics, which
was affirmed by physics at the beginning of the Modern Age. |
|
Archytas
|
58.7N |
5.0E |
31 |
~ of Tarentum (c. 428-350 B.C.?), Greek
statesman, military commander, leading Pythagorean mathematician and
philosopher; often called "the father of mathematical mechanics."
Aristotle wrote a special treatise on his work, entitled The Philosophy of
Archytas. His theories on the exact sciences were based on two principles:
that there is no absolute difference between the organic and the inorganic
world; and that the law of causality cannot interpret phenomena. In
mathematics, Archytas was the first to distinguish between arithmetic and
geometric progressions; he also found a solution to the problem of doubling
the cube. He is believed to be the inventor of the screw and the pulley, and
is considered a forefather of mechanical flight. |
|
Argelander
|
16.5S |
5.8E |
34 |
Friedrich Wilhelm August (F.W.A.) ~
(1799-1875), German astronomer; a student of Bessel (q.v.) and his assistant
at the Königsberg observatory. in Finnland. Became director of the university
observatory at Turku (Åbo), Finland, in 1823, and professor of astronomy at
the university in 1828; the university and observatory were relocated to
Helsinki in 1832. With the patronage of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, he planned
and built the observatory at Bonn, Germany (1845). Authored several catalogs
of visible stars, including the Uranometria nova and Bonner
Durchmusterung (Bonn Survey). The Argelander Method for Visual Variable
Star Brightness Estimation, which he devised, was named in his honor. |
|
Ariadaeus
|
4.6N |
17.3E |
11 |
Philipus III Arrhidaeus, or ~ (?-317
B.C.) King of Babylon and patron of astronomy; half-brother and successor of
Alexander the Great (q.v.). |
|
Ariosto
|
3.6S |
95.6E |
23 |
Ludovico ~ (1474-1533), Italian
nobleman, poet, playwright and familiare to Roman Catholic cardinals;
his Orlando Furioso (1532) was the most celebrated narrative poem of
the Italian Renaissance. |
|
Aristarchus
|
23.7N |
47.4W |
40 |
~ of Samos (c. 310-230 B.C.), Greek astronomer;
first to assert that the Earth rotates and revolves around the Sun. Also found
a more precise value for the length of the solar year. |
|
Aristillus
|
33.9N |
1.2E |
55 |
~ (fl. c. 280 B.C.), Greek
philosopher and astronomer; with Timocharis (q.v.), prepared the first known
star catalog in the third century B.C. |
|
Aristoteles
|
50.2N |
17.4E |
87 |
~ (383-322 B.C.), Greek astronomer,
mathematician and philosopher; considered, along with his teacher, Plato, the
most influential philosopher of the western tradition. At age 17, he entered
Plato's academy in Athens, and remained there until Plato's death. Served as
tutor to the young Alexander the Great. In 335 he returned to Athens where he
founded the Lyceum. Here he organized and conducted research on many subjects,
and built the first great library of antiquity. Aristoteles wrote on many
subjects, including logic, physics, psychology, natural history, ethics,
sleep, dreams and meteorology. |
|
Armiński
|
16.4S |
154.2E |
26 |
Franciszek ~ (1789-1848), Polish
astronomer; founder of the Astronomical Observatory at Warsaw University |
|
Armstrong
|
1.4N |
25.0E |
4 |
Neil Alden ~ (1930- ), American
naval aviator, test pilot and astronaut; made his first flight in space aboard
Gemini 8 (1966), during which he and fellow astronaut David Scott
successfully performed the first docking in space between two spacecraft. In
July 1969, Neil Armstrong was the commander of Apollo 11, the first
attempt to land a manned vehicle on the Moon. On July 20, 1969, he and fellow
astronaut Edwin Aldrin (q.v.) successfully touched down on the lunar surface.
As the first person to touch the Moon's surface, Armstrong spoke the phrase,
"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." He and
Aldrin explored the Moon's surface for 2.5 hours. Armstrong was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in recognition of his accomplishments and his
contributions to the space program. |
|
Arnold
|
66.8N |
35.9E |
94 |
Christoph ~ (1650-1695), German
farmer and astronomer; discovered the Great Comet of 1683 eight days before
Hevelius and observed the great Comet of 1686. For his observation of the
transit of Mercury in front of the Sun in 1690, he received an amount of money
and a tax exemption from the town of Leipzig. |
|
Arrhenius
|
55.6S |
91.3W |
40 |
Svante August ~ (1859-1927), Swedish
chemist; awarded the 1903 Nobel Award in chemistry "in recognition of the
extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his
electrolytic theory of dissociation." |
|
Artamonov
|
25.5N |
103.5E |
60 |
Nikolaj N. ~ (1906-1965), Soviet rocket
scientist. |
|
Artem'ev
|
10.8N |
144.4W |
67 |
Vladimir A. ~ (1885-1962), Soviet rocket
scientist. |
|
Artemis
|
25.0N |
25.4W |
2 |
Greek goddess of the Moon. |
|
Artsimovich
|
27.6N |
36.6W |
8 |
Lev Andreyevich ~ (1909-1973), Soviet physicist
and educator; professor at the universities of Leningrad and Moscow, he also
invented the Tokamak, the device that has come closest to demonstrating
the feasibility of controlled thermonuclear energy production. Director of the
Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy; member of the Presidium of the U.S.S.R.
Academy of Sciences and Academician-Secretary of its Division of General
Physics and Astronomy; President of the National Committee of the
International Union of Pure and Applied Physics; delegate on the Council of
the European Physical Society; President of the National Committee of Soviet
Physicists; member of the Commission on disarmament problems of the Presidium
of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences; and member of the International
Continuing Committee of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. |
|
Aryabhata
|
6.2N |
35.1E |
22 |
~ I, or ~ the Elder (476-c. 550), Indian
astronomer and mathematician; his masterpiece, the Aryabhatiya, is a
small astronomical treatise written in 118 verses giving a summary of Hindu
mathematics up to that time. India's first satellite, launched in 1975, was
named for him;
Also ~ II (c. 920-c. 1000), Indian mathematician; his Mahasiddhanta,
a treatise on mathematical astronomy written in Sanskrit verse, covers the
longitudes of the planets, eclipses of the Sun and Moon, the projection of
eclipses, the lunar crescent, the rising and setting of the planets, and
conjunctions of the planets with each other and with the stars. |
|
Arzachel
|
18.2S |
1.9W |
96 |
al-Zarkala, or ~ (c. 1028-1087), Spanish-Arabic astronomer
and geographer; determined the meridian distance between his observatory in
Toledo and Baghdad to amount to 51° 30’, an error of only 3° as compared
with Ptolemy’s error of 18°. |
|
Asada
|
7.3N |
49.9E |
12 |
Goryu ~ (1734-1799), Japanese
physician and astronomer; helped to introduce modern astronomical instruments
and methods into Japan. Often credited with the independent discovery of
Kepler’s third law. |
|
Asclepi
|
55.1S |
25.4E |
42 |
Giuseppe Maria ~ (1706-1776), Italian
Jesuit astronomer; director of the observatory at the Collegio Romano. His
most famous work was De veneris per solem transitu exercitatio astronomica
habita in Collegio Romano anno 1761. |
|
Ashbrook
|
81.4S |
112.5W |
156 |
Joseph ~, Ph.D. (1918-1980), American astronomer;
a Harvard-educated Yale astronomer, he co-discovered the comet 47P/Ashbrook-Jackson
while studying minor planets from Lowell Observatory (Arizona, USA). |
|
Aston
|
32.9N |
87.7W |
43 |
Francis William ~ (1877-1945), British
chemist and physicist; awarded the 1922 Nobel Prize in chemistry "for his
discovery, by means of his mass spectrograph, of isotopes, in a large number
of non-radioactive elements, and for his enunciation of the whole-number
rule." |
|
Atlas
|
46.7N |
44.4E |
87 |
Mythological Greek Titan. |
|
Atwood
|
5.8S |
57.7E |
29 |
George ~ (1745-1807), British mathematician, physicist
and engineer; best known for his textbook on Newtonian mechanics, A
Treatise on the Rectilinear Motion (1784), in which he describes a
machine, now known as Atwood's machine, to demonstrate the laws of uniformly
accelerated motion due to gravity. He also wrote on the construction of arches
and on the design of a new iron London Bridge over the Thames. |
|
Austen
|
9.0S |
0.0E |
28 |
Jane ~ (1775-1817), British author;
best known for her novels Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma
and Persuasion, and for her wit and social observations. |
|
Autolycus
|
30.7N |
1.5E |
39 |
~ of Pitane (c. 360-c. 290 B.C.), Greek
mathematician, academic and astronomer; two of his books (On the Moving
Sphere, a work on the geometry of the sphere, and On Risings and
Settings, on observational astronomy) have endured in the original Greek
and are believed to be the earliest mathematics works to have survived. |
|
Auwers
|
15.1N |
17.2E |
20 |
Georg Friedrich Julius Arthur ~
(1838-1915), German astronomer; helped found the Potsdam Astrophysical
Observatory. Began the project of unifying all of the world’s celestial
catalogs from 1750 on, a task not completed until 1966. Secretary of the
Berlin Academy (1866-1915). Awarded the 1899 Bruce Medal. |
|
Auzout
|
10.3N |
64.1E |
32 |
Adrien ~ (1622-1691), French
astronomer and physicist; founding member of the French Royal Observatory.
Also made a significant contribution to the final development of the
micrometer and to the replacement of open sights by telescopic sights. He
wrote a memoir on the measurement of the Earth in which he advised the
attachment of telescopes to surveying instruments. |
|
Avery
|
1.4S |
81.4E |
9 |
Oswald Theodore ~ (1877-1955), Canadian-American
bacteriologist; worked on many strains of bacteria, applying different
immunological and chemical methods. Published a vital clinical study of the
tuberculosis bacterium in 1913. |
|
Avicenna
|
39.7N |
97.2W |
74 |
Abu Ali al-Hussain Ibn Abdallah Ibn
Sina, or ~ (980-1037 C.E.), Persian philosopher and physician; the most famous
physician, philosopher, encyclopaedist, mathematician and astronomer of his
time. His major contribution to medical science was the al-Qanun, known
as the "Canon" in the West. The Qanun fi al-Tibb is an
immense encyclopedia of medicine of over a million words, surveying the entire
medical knowledge available from ancient and Muslim sources. |
|
Avogadro
|
63.1N |
164.9E |
139 |
Amedeo ~, Conte di Quaregna
(1776-1856), Italian physicist and academician; advanced the hypothesis,
today known as Avogadro’s law, that equal volumes of gases under identical
conditions of pressure and temperature contain the same number of molecules.
The hypothesis, though not accepted for some fifty years after its
introduction, is now one of the fundamental concepts of the atomic theory of
matter. |
|
Azophi
|
22.1S |
12.7E |
47 |
'Abd al-Rahman Al-Sufi, or al-Suphi,
or ~ (903-986), Persian astronomer; the first astronomer to describe the
'nebulosity' of the nebula in Andromeda in his book of constellations. His
book Kitab al-Kawatib al-Thabit al-Musawwar was a masterpiece on
stellar astronomy and is considered important even now for the study of proper
motions and long period variables. |
|

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